WCR logo
 

Thursday - 05/23/2013

Click for Edmonton City Centre, Alberta Forecast

St. Paul - Mundare St. Paul
Jubilee
2008-2009
Catechism Logo Exploring the
Catholic Catechism
Compendium-Cover
Compendium
of the
Social Doctrine
of the Church

Last Updated: Friday - 09/24/2010


Week of September 17, 2007


Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul unveiled


Fr. Ron Rolheiser

In Exile

By FR. RON ROLHEISER, omi


A recent book on Mother Teresa, Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light, makes public a huge volume of her intimate correspondence and in it we see what looks like a very intense, 50-year struggle with faith and belief.

Again and again, she describes her religious experience as "dry," "empty," "lonely," "torturous," "dark," "devoid of all feeling." During the last half-century of her life, it seems she was unable to feel or imagine God's existence.

And so some are making that judgment that her faith wasn't real. Their view is that she lived the life of a saint, but died the death of an atheist.

For doctrinaire atheists, her confession of doubt is manna from the abyss. Christopher Hitchens, for example, writes: "She was no more exempt from the realization that religion is a human fabrication than any other person, and that her attempted cure was more and more professions of faith could only have deepened the pit that she dug for herself."

What's to be said about all of this?

What Mother Teresa underwent is called "a dark night of the soul." This is what Jesus suffered on the cross when he cried out: "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"

When he uttered those words, he meant them. At that moment, he felt exactly what Mother Teresa felt so acutely for more than 50 years, namely, the sense that God is absent, that God is dead, that there isn't any God.

But this isn't the absence of faith or the absence of God, it is rather a deeper presence of God, a presence which can only be felt as an emptiness, nothingness, non-existence.

A common soldier dies without fear, Jesus died afraid.

The literature around the "dark night of the soul" makes this point: Sometimes when we are unable to induce any kind of feeling that God exists, when we are unable to imagine God's existence, the reason is because God is now coming into our lives in such a way that we cannot manipulate the experience through ego, narcissism, self-advantage, self-glorification and self-mirroring.

This purifies our experience of God because only when all of our own lights are off can we grasp divine light in its purity.

Only when we are completely empty of ourselves inside an experience, when our heads and hearts are pumping dry, can God touch us in a way that makes it impossible for us to inject ourselves into the experience, so that we are worshiping God, not ourselves.

And this is painful. It is experienced precisely as darkness, doubt, abandonment. But this is "the test" that we pray God to spare us from whenever we pray Matthew's version of the Lord's Prayer - "Do not put us to the test." Moreover this experience is usually given to those who have the maturity to handle it, spiritual athletes, those who pray for and truly want a searing "purity of heart," people like Mother Teresa. They ask Jesus to experience and feel everything as he did. He just answers their prayers!

Henri Nouwen, in a book entitled, In Memorium, shares a similar thing about his mother: She was, he states, the most faith-filled and generous woman he had ever met. So when he stood at her bedside as she was dying, he had every right to expect that her death would be a serene witness to a life of deep faith.

But what happened seemed the exact reverse. She struggled, was seized by doubts, cried out and died inside a certain darkness. Only later, after prayer and reflection, did this make sense. His mother prayed her whole life to die like Jesus - and she did! A common soldier dies without fear, Jesus died afraid.

In a remarkable book, The Crucified God, Jurgens Moltmann writes: "Our faith begins at the point where atheists suppose that it must end. Our faith begins with the bleakness and power which is the night of the cross, abandonment, temptation and doubt about everything that exists!

"Our faith must be born where it is abandoned by all tangible reality; it must be born of nothingness, it must taste this nothingness and be given it to taste in a way no philosophy of nihilism can imagine."

Mother Teresa understood all of this. That is why her seeming doubt did not lead her away from God and her vocation but instead riveted her to it with a depth and purity that, more than anything else, tell us precisely what faith really is.


Copyright © 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 -- Western Catholic Reporter


Our mission: To serve our readers by bringing the Gospel to bear on current issues in the Church and in secular culture through accurate news coverage and reflective commentary.